How Did Dorothea Dix Contribute To Mental Illness

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Dorothea Lynde Dix

Born on April the fourth, 1802 in Hampden, Main, Dorothea Lynde Dix was born into a household with a depressed mother, and a father who was never around (history.com). Her lifetime obsession with books came from her father teaching her reading and writing as a kid (history.com). Dorothea’s education furthered when her grandmother took her in at the age of 12 in Boston (history.com). Dorothea began writing books that sold swiftly when her health kept her from a steady career in teaching (history.com). In 1836 she sadly closed down her latest school forever (history.com).
When Dorothea was 14, she started a free school for girls that were poor called Dix Mansion (biography.com). Dorothea’s capacity for caring for the mentally ill was mostly motivated by the insane asylum she visited most commonly known as the York Retreat after recovering from illness (learningtogive.org). During 1836 Dorothea
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“...prisoners flogged, starved, chained, physically and sexually abused by their keepers, and left naked and without heat or sanitation...” (history.com). Dorothea did not believe mental illness should be a crime, and she didn't believe that it wasn't un-curable (science20). Because of this, she showed the ghastly reports of the inmates lives, which sickened her spectators in Massachusetts and lead to funds being set aside for the state mental hospital in Worcester (history.com). Later Dorothea traveled to other states including Europe and Canada to accomplish the same goal (history.com). After this, Dorothea tried to ask Congress to grant 12 million acres of land for the mentally ill, however in 1854 president Franklin Pierce vetoed the bill

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